Impersonation on Linux and UNIX systems

The su command (as used by HCL Launch) enables a user to start a shell as another user (process steps can be considered individual shells).

When you configure a process step (see Processes), you can tell HCL Launch to use impersonation for the step. By default, su is used but you can use sudo instead. To configure impersonation, you supply the user name that is required by the target host. When the impersonation-configured process step runs, the su or sudo command runs the step as the impersonated user. Each step that needs user impersonation must be configured independently.

Note: The user account must have root privileges in order to issue the su or sudo command when installing.

Before sudo can be used, impersonation privileges must be defined in the /etc/sudoers file. When you configure sudoers, ensure that the impersonating user does not need to supply a password. Typically, you would configure the /etc/sudoers file like the following example:

Defaults:X !requiretty 
X ALL=(Y) NOPASSWD: ALL 

where X and Y are user names. Configured this way, user X can run any command as user Y without supplying a password.

Also, Y can be a comma separated list, as shown here:

X ALL=(Y1, Y2, Y3) NOPASSWD: ALL
Note: The impersonated user must have read and execute access to the agent working directory.

As an alternative to configuring sudoers, in some cases you can configure the PAM via the module pam_wheel.so to allow certain users to log in without specifying a password. In this case, add users to a specific wheel group and edit the PAM configuration allow users in this group to run commands as though they were the root user.

su and sudo maintain a record in the system logs of all of their activity. su can be used without configuring the sudoers file. For information about su/sudo, see the UNIX or Linux documentation.

Note: For UNIX or Linux agents, the password option is ignored.
To customize the su and sudo commands, you can set the following properties on the agent, in the installed.properties file:
Table 1. Agent properties for the su and sudo commands
Property Default value Description
com.urbancode.shell.impersonation.unix.sudoFormat %s -n -u %u %c Syntax of the sudo command
com.urbancode.shell.impersonation.unix.sudoGroupFormat %s -n -u %u -g %g %c Syntax of the sudo command when a group is specified
com.urbancode.shell.impersonation.unix.suFormat %s - %u -c %c Syntax of the su command
Tip: To set these properties on new agents, create a generic process that updates the installed.properties file and run the process on new agents.
  1. Create a generic process that appends the property to the file located at /conf/agent/installed.properties (for example, use a Shell step to append the property to the file). Make sure you have the right file, the default working directory for a generic process is \var\work.
  2. Once you've added the property, go to the Resources -> Agents tab, select the agents, and go to Actions -> Restart . This will restart the agent process and pick up the new property. It is recommended restarting no more than ~100 agents at a time to make sure they're all able to reconnect to the server quickly.

    If the agents are installed as services and you don't mind restarting the whole machine, you could alternatively use the Linux or Windows System tools plug-ins to restart the whole machine as part of the generic process, removing the need to restart all the agents from the UI.

    If the agents are started by a root user having system group, then the user running WAS plug-in should also be part of the system group or else the plug-in step fails with permission issue.

  3. If later you need to run the generic process in bulk, you can create an application just for that purpose and add all the agents to an environment. You can then use the For every agent step to run a generic process on all the agents at once. It is recommended you should only do this process on a few agents so that you can test that everything is configured properly before moving to configuring the agents in bulk.
You can use the following variables in these properties:
Table 2. Variables for the su and sudo commands
Variable Value
%s The location of the su or sudo executable
%u The user
%g The group
%c The command to run